Last year Hurricanes Katrina and Rita pounded Louisiana with a horrible
one-two punch of destruction. This year, it's just possible that
Louisiana will send forth its own hurricane: a political hurricane to
create a more representative democracy in America.

On May 10, a Louisiana house committee approved the National Popular
Vote plan for presidential elections. If signed into law, it would make
Louisiana the first of what promises to be dozens of states entering
into an interstate agreement to guarantee election of the national
popular vote winner in presidential elections -- and ensure every vote
is equal no matter where it is cast.

Louisiana is the posterchild for how the way states have chosen to
allocate electoral votes results in rampant inequality and imbalances
in policy. When Florida was hit by hurricanes in 2004, federal reaction
was immediate and widely applauded in the state. But when Katrina and
Rita came ashore in Louisiana in 2005, we all know the federal response
was far more problematic.

It is hardly a stretch to finger the Electoral College as a key reason
why Florida received so much better service from the federal
government. Consider that Florida is the quintessential battleground
state, so large and tightly balanced that it alone can tilt the
presidency. In the final five weeks of the 2004 presidential campaign,
the four major party presidential and vice-presidential candidates made
61 campaign stops in Florida out of 291 in states around the country.
Out of $237 million spent on television ads by the campaigns and their
backers in that period, more than $64 million was spent in Florida.

In sharp contrast, Louisiana didn't earn even a single campaign visit
during those final weeks, while a measly $203,000 was spent in the
state on television ads. You can be absolutely certain that no campaign
consultant worried about the concerns of Louisiana voters. Indeed
George Bush's campaign team didn't poll a single person outside of 18
battleground states in the final two and a half years of the campaign.

Last year FairVote established an "attention index" based on campaign
activities in the peak season of the 2004 campaign. If every state were
treated equally, each would have had an attention index of 1.0. But
Louisiana had an index of only 0.03 -- less than one-thirtieth of what
it should have received under a system where every vote mattered
equally. Remarkably, that actually put Louisiana ahead of 23 states,
most of which were utterly ignored in the campaign, including almost
all small states.

Given that it wasn't long ago that Louisiana was close in nationally
competitive elections, some might think those days are coming back. But
the number of battleground states is steadily shrinking, with only half
the number of electoral votes "in play" as there were a generation ago.
Without the National Popular Vote plan, Louisiana should expect even
less attention in 2008 than the little it received in 2004.

Fortunately, the U.S. Constitution gives states the power to do what's
best for its people in deciding how to allocate electoral votes. In our
nation's early years, few states in fact awarded all electoral votes to
the statewide vote winner. Today, most states have adopted that
approach, but it isn't in the Constitution -- and it certainly is not
in the interests of Louisiana.

What most Americans want is simple: a national popular vote where every
vote is equal and the candidate with the most votes wins. For decades
Gallup polls have shown landslide support for a national vote where all
Americans have an equal ability to hold the president accountable.
Typically that support has covered Republicans, Democrats and
independents alike - that's why national backers included Richard
Nixon, George H.W. Bush, Lyndon Johnson, Bob Dole and Howard Baker and
Louisiana leaders like Hale Boggs, Edwin Edwards and John Breaux.

Only since George Bush won the 2000 election despite losing the popular
vote has Republican support dropped, but the new drive for a national
popular vote is not about helping Democrats. George Bush in fact
cruised to a national popular vote victory margin of three and a half
million votes in 2004, but would have lost if 60,000 Ohio voters had
changed their minds.

Louisiana has everything to gain and nothing to fear about being the
first state to join this agreement. Nothing will change until the
number of states in the agreement makes it decisive. That means we will
either see presidential elections run exactly as they are now or we
will have a national popular vote.

New ideas can take getting used to, but the National Popular Vote is as
old as American democracy: holding elections for powerful offices where
every vote is equal. We have decades of experience in running
one-person, one-vote elections for governor and Senator. When those
elections are close, every voter matters, and every region of a state
gets attention from at least one of the campaigns. States have every
reason to establish this kind of democracy for presidential elections
--- and the constitutionally protected power to do just that. Here's
hoping HB 927 advances to Governor Blanco's desk in 2006.(Rob Richie is executive director of FairVote and co-author of the book
"Every Vote Equal: A State-Based Plan for Electing the President by
National Popular Vote." www.fairvote.org)